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Thread: Finewood Working Website - Worth the cost?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
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    Hillsboro, OR
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    111

    Finewood Working Website - Worth the cost?

    Tauton has a subscription for many things on their website. Is it worth the price?

    Thanks

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    Raleigh, NC
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    2,854
    Yes. For subscribers, it's $14.95 a year. I'm not sure what it is if you don't subscribe to FWW, so it's possible they want so much for non-subscribers that it wouldn't be worth it.

    One of the reasons to get it, though, is not the recent content of the site or the magazine, it's for the older, out-of-print articles by masters of the trade and hobby. As an example, I needed to make a 6-board chest in miniature for a niece. I searched on those terms and presto - an instant article by Michael Dunbar on the subject. As a bonus, he provided details of how best to do it with hand tools.

  3. #3
    I don't know if this has changed, but not all the old articles were available on the web site. I sent a note to FWW and got a response from the publisher that FWW did not have electronic rights to the old articles.

    But I see they are selling a DVD of all the old issues (from 1 - 201) so maybe that's changed. While it's more money, you might consider the DVD. You only pay once, as opposed to $15 each year, and you can later sell the DVD.

    Mike
    Go into the world and do well. But more importantly, go into the world and do good.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Dayton, Ohio
    Posts
    291
    You could always try the free 14 day trial. That's what I did and just remember to cancel before your billed if your not happy with the service. I downloaded what I needed and cancelled the service.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
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    Pennsylvania
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    Quote Originally Posted by Justin Leiwig View Post
    You could always try the free 14 day trial. That's what I did and just remember to cancel before your billed if your not happy with the service. I downloaded what I needed and cancelled the service.
    So why weren't you happy with the service?
    "If you lend someone $20 and never see that person again, it was probably a wise investment."

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Trussville, AL
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    3,589
    I don't find enough that I can deal with to make the magazine subscription worth the money to me, but I do subscribe to the website, I find tons of stuff there.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Dayton, Ohio
    Posts
    291
    Quote Originally Posted by Rob Bodenschatz View Post
    So why weren't you happy with the service?
    Too expensive to keep. Especially since I wasn't a subscriber to their magazine. Plus it seemed more geared toward hand work, which I'm not fond of being that I'm lazy...and fat

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    Huntsville, AL
    Posts
    326
    I think it is worth the price of admission. I am on the site a few times a week and have downloaded over 100 articles. I have paid more and gotten less on many occasions
    Quote Originally Posted by James Carmichael View Post
    I suspect family members are plotting an intervention.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Jackson CA
    Posts
    268

    Available

    Having the information is worth it to me (as a subscriber). I have used it often and usually about a subject I had not even thought I would need to know anything about.

  10. #10
    I love my FWW website subscription! I do not subscribe to the mag. I think the annual fee is $30-35.

    Why the site and not the mag. I get all the mag content online. Plus, I get almost every article ever published in the history of the mag. Most are downloadable in pdf format. and the content is fully searchable.

    I travel a lot, so I love that I can access any available article anywhere in the world, even at the in-laws house when my mind is going numb.

    I search for the articles I want, read them online. Then, I can print any of these articles and make notes as needed. If I spill coffee on the printout, if my toddler makes confetti of it, or I drop it in the toilet, all I have to do is print a fresh copy!

    There is a bunch of web video content, as well.

    I highly recommend it.
    Last edited by Danny Thompson; 12-18-2008 at 2:43 PM.

  11. #11
    Join Date
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    East Brunswick, NJ
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    Quote Originally Posted by Justin Leiwig View Post
    Too expensive to keep. Especially since I wasn't a subscriber to their magazine. Plus it seemed more geared toward hand work, which I'm not fond of being that I'm lazy...and fat
    That's interesting -- I bought membership to their website, and I get a little annoyed about all the table saw articles. I mean, how many times can you write about tapering jigs?

  12. #12
    Quote Originally Posted by Danny Thompson View Post
    Why the site and not the mag. I get all the mag content online.
    I always wondered about that. When a new issue comes out, is every article immediately available on-line?

  13. #13
    To the best of my knowledge, yes. There is a link on the home page that is a snapshot of the current mag cover. Click the link and see a table of contents with links to a page that either has the article or a summary with a link to a full pdf of the article. I guess I have never done a side-by-side comparison of a printed and online version, but, for example, the online TOC for the current issue (Jan/Feb 2009) follows (I think I caught them mid-update):
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    A CLASSIC STEP STOOL
    by Tommy MacDonald
    Improve your hand-tool skills as you build this versatile piece
    30 Read this article online

    ONLINE EXTRA
    - Finish recipe

    JOINERY SHOOTOUT
    by Douglas Moore and Thomas McKenna
    We push 18 popular frame joints to the breaking point
    36 Read this article online

    ONLINE EXTRA
    Video: Joinery Shootout (coming soon)

    TUNE UP YOUR WORKBENCH
    by Richard L. Humphreville
    You can't do good work on a worn-out bench, so flatten the top, tighten the base, and adjust the vises
    42 Read this article online

    DO MORE WITH YOUR DADO SET
    by Steve Latta
    Stay safe and get better results from this versatile saw accessory
    48 Read this article online (coming soon)

    HICKORY AND ASH BLANKET CHEST
    by Peter Turner
    Floating tenons and a consistent angle keep joinery manageable
    54 Read this article online

    ONLINE EXTRA
    - Finish recipe

    RE-CREATING A SHAKER FINISH
    by Linda Coit
    To match a 200-year-old finish, an expert uses common tools and techniques
    62 Read this article online

    TURN A PAD-FOOT LEG
    by Jon Siegel
    A graceful leg that's easy to make entirely on the lathe
    68 Read this article online

    TRUE GREENE & GREENE
    by Gary Rogowski
    Learn how the elements work together, and then use them in your furniture
    72 Read this article online

    ONLINE EXTRAS
    Video: Tour The Gamble House with a Greene and Greene expert
    Asa Christiana visits The Gamble House and The Huntington Library


    DepartmentsPage
    CONTRIBUTORS
    8 View all contributors

    LETTERS
    10 View all letters

    METHODS OF WORK
    14 Lighted storage cart for tools and lumber
    - Rip sandpaper to size with precision
    - Sawhorse folds up when you lift it
    - Quick tip: Use clear stretch wrap for quick wrapping and clamping
    - Adjustable jig makes big and small fingers
    - Quick tip: Use pumice to remove rust

    TOOLS & MATERIALS
    20 - New 12-in. jointer/planers: Grizzly G0633 and Laguna MJP 0540-0175
    - Sturdy benchtop clamps have rapid action
    - Rabbet plane cuts beautifully (coming soon)
    - Digital protractor is accurate and easy to read
    - Use your dust collector to clean the shop
    - Bessey's new K Body parallel clamp
    FUNDAMENTALS
    24 7 habits of highly effective woodworkers
    READERS GALLERY
    78 Visit The Gallery, and share photos of your work

    Q & A
    82 - Plywood edging that matches perfectly
    - Marking knife cuts wrong board
    - Silence a whistling tablesaw blade
    - How do burn-in and wax sticks differ?
    MASTER CLASS
    88 Boulle marquetry: two panels for the price of one
    ONLINE EXTRA
    Video Boulle Marquetry Basics

    </SPAN>FINISH LINE
    94 Finishing oily woods
    ADVERTISER INDEX
    100 Online index to our advertisers

    HOW THEY DID IT
    102 Shaped to perfection (coming soon)

    BACK COVER
    Vessels from the veranda

    ONLINE EXTRA
    Slideshow: Pro Portfolio: Subtropical Virtuoso
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    Looks pretty complete to me.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    35 miles north of NY City
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    Doesn't work for me. I tried the 14 day trial and canceled.

    It really depends on what kind of woodworking you do. If you're interested in furniture and cabinetry, and do most of your work with power tools, it's probably worthwhile. If you really really really enjoy power tools, then go for it.

    My woodworking is boat building, and I do it almost exclusively with hand tools. I exhausted the supply of useful (teaching me something I haven't already seen) hand tool articles in only a couple of hours of the trial period.

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    West of Boston East of worcester north of RI South of nashua
    Posts
    87

    Worth it

    I think it is worth it - I had the online for one year and downloaded several hundred good articles - i still have not read through it all but the amount of information is vast.

    I cancelled because of all the magazines and online information i found, Woodworking magazine and woodsmith best fit my current woodworking interests.

    Give it a whirl for 14 days - but make sure you have plenty of time to search - and search more than just what you are currently interested in as you might find some good info that you never thought you needed.

    andy
    Andy
    Keep Life Simple

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